Mountains
” I will never forget my first mountain climb; Moel Siabod in North Wales. It was merely a rounded hump and at less than 1,000 metres above sea level, it was no more than a long walk.
However, soaking in the draw-dropping views from the summit with my mates was a defining moment in my life. My wanderlust had been sparked and I wanted more of it.
Having had a fascination with snow since I was a toddler, I wanted to get above the snowline – in my eyes, that’s where the real adventure lay. Subsequent climbs on steeper terrain in Snowdonia, the Lake District and the Scottish Highlands gave me the opportunity to use ice axes and crampons for the first time, climbing frozen waterfalls and mixed routes in winter conditions.
Over the course of the next few years, I began organising my own expeditions which took me all over the world, often combining my passion for the mountains with a lifelong love of skiing. Highlights included a series of ice climbs on the Mont Blanc Massif, 6,500-metre peaks in the Bolivian Andes, a rarely-used route up Mount Kilimanjaro, a first ski descent of the western breach of the Franz Josef Glacier in New Zealand, the famous Haute Route ski traverse in the Alps, a solo attempt on Aconcagua (the highest peak in the Andes), big mountains in Tibet in the shadow of Everest and skiing down an erupting volcano in Chile.